A rousing documentary profiles Joshua Wong, the adolescent activist who found fame with his protests against the Chinese government
By Gwilym Mumford
Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong, who is profiled in Joshua: Teenager vs Superpower.
Joshua Wong, the student who risked the wrath of Beijing: ‘It’s about turning the impossible into the possible’
The Joshua of the title is Joshua Wong, an unassuming Hong Kong schoolboy who decided to pick a fight with the next global superpower, and won, at least initially.
In 2011 14-year-old Wong and his Scholarism movement managed to defeat an effort to make China’s communist National Education curriculum mandatory in Hong Kong schools through the power of peaceful protest.
It was the first victory an activist group managed in the territory since it came under Chinese rule in 1997.
If Wong had cashed his chips in there and then his story might have made for a pleasing if fairly minor documentary.
If Wong had cashed his chips in there and then his story might have made for a pleasing if fairly minor documentary.
But, as this absorbing new Netflix film shows, he instead got involved in a far more significant battle: over the democratic future of Hong Kong itself.
In 2014 Scholarism became part of the wider Umbrella movement, the Occupy-style group set up to protest a refusal by China to allow Hong Kong to elect their own leaders.
In 2014 Scholarism became part of the wider Umbrella movement, the Occupy-style group set up to protest a refusal by China to allow Hong Kong to elect their own leaders.
Officially the country is afforded a relaxed position within the One China policy, permitted to maintain its present capitalist form for 50 years as part of the handover deal made between China and the UK.
Yet, there has been a perceived ratcheting up of influence by Beijing in recent times, prompting a more robust response from those opposed to China’s control, particularly from younger citizens like Wong who see Hong Kong’s semi-autonomy as central to their identity.
Joshua Wong.
Teenager vs Superpower does a solid job of contextualising this larger ideological battle, with talking heads and archive footage, but it’s always clear that the focus here is Wong.
He’s a remarkable figure perhaps because, on the surface he seems so unremarkable -- a gawky teen in oversized clothes from a lower-middle class background who nevertheless manages to rouse people with his energy and plain speaking.
His ‘wunderkind’ status helps too of course – one commentator here compares him with Joan of Arc for his ability to enter a complex adult conflict and resolve it with youthful simplicity.
While Teenager vs. Superpower is often as in thrall to Wong as his followers, director Joe Piscatella does also allow for some dissenting voices who see Wong’s celebrity presence as detrimental to the larger movement.
While Teenager vs. Superpower is often as in thrall to Wong as his followers, director Joe Piscatella does also allow for some dissenting voices who see Wong’s celebrity presence as detrimental to the larger movement.
One accuses him of hijacking the protests and there’s a sense that his adolescent impetuousness might cost him dearly in the end.
Rallying cries like “it’s time for total war” are unlikely to be received warmly by those in Beijing, and Joshua is aware of the parlous situation he’s created for himself when, at one point in the documentary he notes, “I can’t ensure I will not be disappeared in the future.”
For the time being China seem to be adopting a softly softly approach to Wong and indeed the larger protest movement inside Hong Kong.
For the time being China seem to be adopting a softly softly approach to Wong and indeed the larger protest movement inside Hong Kong.
As the documentary progresses – and it’s worth issuing a spoiler warning here for those who don’t want to be broadsided by details of widely reported real-life events – we see the Umbrella Protests falter and ultimately fail, not because of a Tiananmen Square-style crackdown, but as a result of apathy and fatigue on the part of its participants.
Even a hunger strike by Wong, when his camp is finally dismantled by police, isn’t enough to reinvigorate the movement.
Ultimately, even Scholarism feels forced to call it a day.
That would of course make for a pretty downbeat coda to an otherwise rousing documentary – not to mention wildly out of character from Wong – and encouragingly things end with him and several other members of Scholarism forming a new political entity, Demonsisto, and plotting to run for political office.
That would of course make for a pretty downbeat coda to an otherwise rousing documentary – not to mention wildly out of character from Wong – and encouragingly things end with him and several other members of Scholarism forming a new political entity, Demonsisto, and plotting to run for political office.
The fight for Hong Kong’s future is far from over, and it seems that Joshua is going to be a major player in it.
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